Therefore, I've added a sanity checker.
Note that it can be combined with almost any other argument (the other
arguments will be completely ignored), with "reconf" as the blatant
exception, since it also has the behavior of ignoring all following
command line arguments. If --test-sanity and reconf are both used on
the command line, the first one wins.
* make openssl rsa work with -engine chil
* misc changes, including debug-linux-ppro Configure target
and FORMAT_NETSCAPE-aware load_{,pub}key()
This completes the application of his changes.
field here, which is left empty).
Various configurations are *only* in the 0.9.6 branch at the moment:
OpenUNIX
OpenUNIX-8-gcc-shared
OpenUNIX-8-shared
Either Configure or CHANGES must be changed to rectify the situation.
used or not, let's ask collect2 which ld it uses and choose to use the
target do-gnu_shared if GNU ld is used.
This solves the reported problems on Solaris systems where GNU cc is
used but GNU ld isn't, and probably on other systems with similar
setups.
me the same and that the correct option is -mcpu=i486. I'm assuming
-mcpu has been around for some time, and that it's therefore safe to
change all occurences of -m486 to -mcpu=i486.
His comments are:
1) Changes all references for `True64' to be `Tru64', which is the correct
spelling for the OS name.
2) Makes `alpha-cc' be the same as `alpha164-cc', and adds an `alphaold-cc'
entry that is the same as the previous `alpha-cc'. The reason is that most
people these days are using the newer compiler, so it should be the default.
3) Adds a bit of commentary to Configure, regarding the name changes of
the OS over the years, so it's not so confusing to people that haven't been
with the OS for a while.
4) Adds an `alpha-cc-rpath' target (which is *not* selected automatically
by Configure under any circumstance) that builds an RPATH into the
shared libraries. This is explained in the comment in Configure. It's
very very useful for people that want it, and people that don't want it
just shouldn't choose that target.
5) Adds the `-pthread' flag as the best way to get POSIX thread support
from the newer compiler.
6) Updates the Makefile targets, so that when the `alpha164-cc', `alpha-cc',
or `alpha-cc-rpath' target is what Configure is set to use, it uses a Makefile
target that includes the `-msym' option when building the shared library.
This is a performance enhancement.
7) Updates `config' so that if it detects you're running version 4 or 5
of the OS, it automatically selects `alpha-cc', but uses `alphaold-cc'
for versions 1-3 of the OS.
8) Updates the comment in opensslv.h, fixing both the OS name typo and
adding a reference to IRIX 6.x, since the shared library semantics are
virtually identical there.
HP-UX in common in ./config). Note that for the moment of this writing
none of 64-bit platforms pass bntest. I'm committing this anyway as it's
too frustrating to patch snapshots over and over while 0.9.6 is known to
work.
explicitely noted that 64-bit SPARCv9 ABI is not officially supported
by GCC 3.0 (support is scheduled for 3.1 release), but it appears to
work, at the very least 'make test' passes...
SSL according to RFC 2712. His comment is:
This is a patch to openssl-SNAP-20010702 to support Kerberized SSL
authentication. I'm expecting to have the full kssl-0.5 kit up on
sourceforge by the end of the week. The full kit includes patches
for mod-ssl, apache, and a few text clients. The sourceforge URL
is http://sourceforge.net/projects/kssl/ .
Thanks to a note from Simon Wilkinson I've replaced my KRB5 AP_REQ
message with a real KerberosWrapper struct. I think this is fully
RFC 2712 compliant now, including support for the optional
authenticator field. I also added openssl-style ASN.1 macros for
a few Kerberos structs; see crypto/krb5/ if you're interested.